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Structure | 1997

The structure of versutoxin (δ-atracotoxin-Hv1) provides insights into the binding of site 3 neurotoxins to the voltage-gated sodium channel

Jamie I. Fletcher; Bogdan E. Chapman; Joel P. Mackay; M.E.H. Howden; Glenn F. King

BACKGROUND Versutoxin (delta-ACTX-Hv1) is the major component of the venom of the Australian Blue Mountains funnel web spider, Hadronyche versuta. delta-ACTX-Hv1 produces potentially fatal neurotoxic symptoms in primates by slowing the inactivation of voltage-gated sodium channels; delta-ACTX-Hv1 is therefore a useful tool for studying sodium channel function. We have determined the three-dimensional structure of delta-ACTX-Hv1 as the first step towards understanding the molecular basis of its interaction with these channels. RESULTS The solution structure of delta-ACTX-Hv1, determined using NMR spectroscopy, comprises a core beta region containing a triple-stranded antiparallel beta sheet, a thumb-like extension protruding from the beta region and a C-terminal 310 helix that is appended to the beta domain by virtue of a disulphide bond. The beta region contains a cystine knot motif similar to that seen in other neurotoxic polypeptides. The structure shows homology with mu-agatoxin-I, a spider toxin that also modifies the inactivation kinetics of vertebrate voltage-gated sodium channels. More surprisingly, delta-ACTX-Hv1 shows both sequence and structural homology with gurmarin, a plant polypeptide. This similarity leads us to suggest that the sweet-taste suppression elicited by gurmarin may result from an interaction with one of the downstream ion channels involved in sweet-taste transduction. CONCLUSIONS delta-ACTX-Hv1 shows no structural homology with either sea anemone or alpha-scorpion toxins, both of which also modify the inactivation kinetics of voltage-gated sodium channels by interacting with channel recognition site 3. However, we have shown that delta-ACTX-Hv1 contains charged residues that are topologically related to those implicated in the binding of sea anemone and alpha-scorpion toxins to mammalian voltage-gated sodium channels, suggesting similarities in their mode of interaction with these channels.


Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 1995

Measuring Protein Self-Association Using Pulsed-Field-Gradient Nmr-Spectroscopy - Application to Myosin Light-Chain-2

Andrew J. Dingley; Joel P. Mackay; Bogdan E. Chapman; Michael B. Morris; Philip W. Kuchel; Brett D. Hambly; Glenn F. King

SummaryAt the millimolar concentrations required for structural studies, NMR spectra of the calcium-binding protein myosin light chain 2 (MLC2) showed resonance line widths indicative of extensive self-association. Pulsed-field-gradient (PFG) NMR spectroscopy was used to examine whether MLC2 aggregation could be prevented by the zwitterionic bile salt derivative 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate (CHAPS). PFG NMR measurements indicated that CHAPS was capable of preventing MLC2 self-association, but only at concentrations well above the critical micelle concentration of ∼7.5 mM. CHAPS was most effective at a concentration of 22.5 mM, where the apparent molecular mass of MLC2 correponded to a protein monomer plus seven molecules of bound detergent. The resolution and sensitivity of 2D 15N-1H HSQC spectra of MLC2 were markedly improved by the addition of 25 mM CHAPS, consistent with a reduction in aggregation following addition of the detergent. The average amide nitrogen T2 value for MLC2 increased from ∼30 ms in the absence of CHAPS to ∼56 ms in the presence of 25 mM CHAPS. The results of this study lead us to propose that PFG NMR spectroscopy can be used as a facile alternative to conventional techniques such as analytical ultracentrifugation for examining the self-association of biological macromolecules.


Concepts in Magnetic Resonance Part A | 2003

Magnetic susceptibility: solutions, emulsions, and cells

Philip W. Kuchel; Bogdan E. Chapman; William A. Bubb; Poul Erik Hansen; C. J. Durrant; M. P. Hertzberg

Differences in magnetic susceptibility between various compartments in heterogeneous samples can introduce unanticipated complications to NMR spectra. On the other hand, an understanding of these effects at the level of the underlying physical principles has led to the development of several experimental techniques that provide data on cellular function that are unique to NMR spectroscopy. To illustrate some key features of susceptibility effects we present, among a more general overview, results obtained with red blood cells and a recently described model system involving diethyl phthalate in water. This substance forms a relatively stable emulsion in water and yet it has a significant solubility of ∼5 mmol L-1 at room temperature; thus, the NMR spectrum has twice as many resonances as would be expected for a simple solution. What determines the relative intensities of the two families of peaks and can their frequencies be manipulated experimentally in a predictable way? The theory used to interpret the NMR spectra from the model system and cells was first developed in the context of electrostatics nearly a century ago, and yet some of its underlying assumptions now warrant closer scrutiny. While this insight is used in a practical way in this article, the accompanying article deals with the mathematics and physics behind this new analysis.


Journal of Biotechnology | 2000

Pathways of glutamine metabolism in Spodoptera frugiperda (Sf9) insect cells: evidence for the presence of the nitrogen assimilation system, and a metabolic switch by 1H/15N NMR☆

Monika Drews; Magnus Doverskog; Lars Öhman; Bogdan E. Chapman; Ulla Jacobsson; Philip W. Kuchel; Lena Häggström

1H/15N and 13C NMR were used to investigate metabolism in Spodoptera frugiperda (Sf9) cells. Labelled substrates ([2-15N]glutamine, [5-15N]glutamine, [2-15N]glutamate, 15NH4Cl, [2-15N]alanine, and [1-13C]glucose) were added to batch cultures and the concentration of labelled excreted metabolites (alanine, NH4+, glutamine, glycerol, and lactate) were quantified. Cultures with excess glucose and glutamine produce alanine as the main metabolic by-product while no ammonium ions are released. 1H/15N NMR data showed that both the amide and amine-nitrogen of glutamine was incorporated into alanine in these cultures. The amide-nitrogen of glutamine was not transferred to the amine-position in glutamate (for further transamination to alanine) via free NH4+ but directly via an azaserine inhibitable amido-transfer reaction. In glutamine-free media 15NH4+ was consumed and incorporated into alanine. 15NH4+ was also incorporated into the amide-position of glutamine synthesised by the cells. These data suggest that the nitrogen assimilation system, glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase (NADH-GOGAT), is active in glutamine-deprived cells. In cultures devoid of glucose, ammonium is the main metabolic by-product while no alanine is formed. The ammonium ions stem both from the amide and amine-nitrogen of glutamine, most likely via glutaminase and glutamate dehydrogenase. 13C NMR revealed that the [1-13C] label from glucose appeared in glycerol, alanine, lactate, and in extracellular glutamine. Labelling data also showed that intermediates of the tricarboxylic acid cycle were recycled to glycolysis and that carbon sources, other than glucose-derived acetylCoA, entered the cycle. Furthermore, Sf9 cell cultures excreted significant amounts glycerol (1.9-3.2 mM) and ethanol (6 mM), thus highlighting the importance of sinks for reducing equivalents in maintaining the cytosolic redox balance.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1984

Cell volume dependence of 1H spin-echo NMR signals in human erythrocyte suspensions: The influence of in situ field gradients

Zoltán Huba Endre; Philip W. Kuchel; Bogdan E. Chapman

The 1H spin-echo NMR signal amplitudes and intensities of low molecular weight solutes in the cytoplasm and extracellular fluid of suspensions of human erythrocytes were shown to depend on the osmotic pressure of the media. At low osmotic pressure (220 mosM/kg) freeze-thaw lysis of the cells resulted in signal enhancement which was greatest for extracellular molecules, but both intra- and extracellular species were almost equally enhanced at 580 mosM/kg. This effect is due to field gradients formed at cell boundaries as a result of differences in magnetic susceptibility between the medium and the cytoplasm. T2 values measured using the Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill pulse sequence, with tau = 0.0003 s, depended little on cell volume and absolute changes in volume magnetic susceptibility were also small. The mean field gradients, calculated from data obtained on cell suspensions at different osmotic pressures, were in the range 0.25-1.98 G/cm and 0.89-2.09 G/cm for intra- and extracellular compartments, respectively. The maintenance of isotonicity of the extracellular fluid during metabolic studies of cell suspensions is important in order to avoid artefacts in the determination of metabolite concentrations when using the spin-echo technique. Conversely it may be possible to perform transport measurements using spin-echo NMR to monitor the cell volume changes which occur during the transmembrane migration of molecules.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 1985

A simple procedure for selective inversion of NMR resonances for spin transfer enzyme kinetic measurements

Gae Robinson; Philip W. Kuchel; Bogdan E. Chapman; David M. Doddrell; Michael G. Irving

Abstract The unidirectional fluxes through enzyme-catalyzed reactions operating at equilibrium can be measured using saturation or inversion transfer NMR spectroscopy. The procedure requires selective saturation or inversion of the magnetization of one species (A) which is exchanging with others (B). To date selective excitation has been via a separate frequency synthesizer channel or multiple-pulse sequences such as DANTE. We apply here a far simpler pulse sequence for selective inversion of spins which generates the so-called d-ordered state. The pulse sequence is π 2 x (η A )-τ 1 - π 2 ±x -τ 2 - π 2 ±x,±y - acquisition , where τ1 = 1 (2|;η A − η B | ), the subscripted ± x and ± y refer to rotating frame axes along which the rf irradiation is applied and τ 2 is a variable delay time. The application of this procedure to measurement of the rate of phosphoryl group transfer catalyzed by phosphoglyceromutase is demonstrated.


Biophysical Journal | 1994

Hemoglobin affinity for 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate in solutions and intact erythrocytes: studies using pulsed-field gradient nuclear magnetic resonance and Monte Carlo simulations.

Alison Lennon; Nerida R. Scott; Bogdan E. Chapman; Philip W. Kuchel

The diffusion coefficient (D) of 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate (DPG) was measured using pulsed-field gradient (PFG)-31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy in solutions containing 2.7-5.0 mM hemoglobin (Hb) and a range of DPG concentrations. The dependence of the measured values of D on the fraction of the total DPG in the sample that is bound to Hb enabled the estimation of the dissociation constants (Kd) of complexes of DPG with carbonmonoxygenated, oxygenated, and deoxygenated Hb; the values of Kd (mM), measured at 25 degrees C, pH 6.9 and in 100 mM bis Tris/50 mM KCl, were 1.98 +/- 0.26, 1.8 +/- 0.5 and 0.39 +/- 0.26, respectively. In intact erythrocytes the apparent diffusion coefficient, Dapp, of DPG was larger in oxygenated and carbonmonoxygenated cells (6.17 +/- 0.20 x 10(-11) m2s-1) than in deoxygenated cells (4.10 +/- 0.23 x 10(-11) m2s-1). Changes in intracellular DPG concentration (5-55 mM) in erythrocytes, brought about by incubation in a medium containing inosine and pyruvate, did not result in significant changes in the value of Dapp; this result supports the hypothesis that DPG binds to other sites in the erythrocyte. Monte Carlo simulations of diffusion in biconcave discs were used to test the adequacy of the values of Kd estimated in solution to describe the binding of DPG to Hb in oxygenated and deoxygenated erythrocytes. The results of the simulations implied that the value of Kd estimated for deoxygenated Hb-DPG was greater than expected from the experiments involving intact erythrocytes. This difference is surmised to be at least partly due to the difficulty of measuring D at low-ligand concentrations. Notwithstanding this shortcoming, the PFG method appears to be suitable for probing interactions between macromolecules and ligands when the Kd is in the millimolar range. It is one of the few techniques available in which these interactions can be studied in intact cells. In addition, the Monte Carlo simulations of the diffusion experiments highlighted important differences between theory and experiment relating to the nature of molecular motion inside the cells.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 1998

Elevated glutamate dehydrogenase flux in glucose-deprived hybridoma and myeloma cells: Evidence from 1H/15N NMR

Kristina Martinelle; Magnus Doverskog; Ulla Jacobsson; Bogdan E. Chapman; Philip W. Kuchel; Lena Häggström

The glutamine metabolism was studied in glucose-starved and glucose-sufficient hybridoma and Sp2/0-Ag14 myeloma cells. Glucose starvation was attained by cultivating the hybridoma cells with fructose instead of glucose, and the myeloma cells with a low initial glucose concentration which was rapidly exhausted. Glutamine used in the experiments was labeled with 15N, either in the amine or in the amide position. The fate of the label was monitored by 1H/15N NMR analysis of released 15NH+4 and 15N-alanine. Thus, NH+4 formed via glutaminase (GLNase) could be distinguished from NH+4 formed via glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH). In the glucose-sufficient cells a small but measurable amount of 15NH+4 released by GDH could be detected in both cell lines (0.75 and 0.31 micromole/10(6) cells for hybridoma and myeloma cells, respectively). The uptake of glutamine and the total production of NH+4 was significantly increased in both fructose-grown hybridoma and glucose-starved myeloma cells, as compared to the glucose-sufficient cells. The increased NH+4 production was due to an increased throughput via GLNase (1.6 -1.9-fold in the hybridoma, and 2.7-fold in the myeloma cell line) and an even further increased metabolism via GDH (4.8-7.9-fold in the hybridoma cells, and 3.1-fold in the myeloma cells). The data indicate that both GLNase and GDH are down-regulated when glucose is in excess, but up-regulated in glucose-starved cells. It was calculated that the maximum potential ATP production from glutamine could increase by 35-40 % in the fructose-grown hybridoma cells, mainly due to the increased metabolism via GDH.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 1991

Translational diffusion of hemoglobin in human erythrocytes and hemolysates

Philip W. Kuchel; Bogdan E. Chapman

Abstract The translational diffusion coefficient of carboxyhemoglobin was measured in whole human erythrocytes and hemolysates at 25°C under conditions of high-resolution NMR with a magnetic field strength of 9.4 T. Actively shielded z-gradient coils in the Stejskal and Tanner pulsed-magnetic-field-gradient experimental were used; this involved two gradient pulses, of which the second was especially “corrected”. The high-resolution character of the spectra ensured ready detection of the envelope of some of the resonances of the hemoglobin-histidyl H2 and H4 protons and thus the determination of the diffusion coefficient from the signal intensities of these protons; the value for a sample of whole cells with a hemoglobin concentration of 355 g (liter cells)−1 was 6.12 ± 1.1 × 10−12 m2s−1 and that for a hemolysate with a hemoglobin concentration of 294 g liter−1 was 1.01 ± 0.06 × 10−11 m2s−1. The cell value of the diffusion coefficient is more than a factor of 10 lower than that of tetrameric hemoglobin A extrapolated to zero concentration.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1976

Conformation of myelin basic protein in aqueous solution from nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy

Bogdan E. Chapman; W.J. Moore

Abstract High resolution 13 C and 1 H NMR spectra of myelin basic protein over a range of pH and concentration indicate that intramolecular folding of the polypeptide chain occurs in the region of residues 8–116. As the pH is raised and the net charge on the protein decreased, intermolecular aggregation occurs between these same regions. The residues 81–118 are invariant in different species and this region is the locus of several chemical specificities of the protein.

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Alison Lennon

University of New South Wales

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Allan M. Torres

University of Western Sydney

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Glenn F. King

University of Queensland

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